- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmit.online
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmit.online
Amazon customer discovers his Intel Core i9-13900K is an i7-13700K in disguise::undefined
Amazon customer discovers his Intel Core i9-13900K is an i7-13700K in disguise::undefined
Still waiting for my refund for what I suspect was a switcharoo return of a PC. Ordered a renewed Optiplex 7040 with an i7-6700 for a family member, but received someone’s old and dusty 3020 with an i3-4150 instead, and the refurb sticker for the right product had been slapped on it.
Figured it was a one-off scam, reordered another one right away, and thankfully the second was legit…but they’ve had the returned PC for 2 weeks now and still no refund. And course no way to follow up about it within the return status itself, so I’ll be wasting even more time trying to chase it down. Something has to change.
One phone call to your credit card, with all evidence ready.
While that would get the money back, credit chargebacks often result in being banned from stores. It’s safer to try working with the store first.
Yeah, gonna be real, I don’t give a fuck if I’m banned from a store that simultaneously doesn’t give me what I paid for and is slow on making it right.
It’s been 2 weeks. Chargeback and be done with them.
Yeah but if they’re not cooperating it’s worth it.
I bought a used cell phone from an ebay reseller who claimed a one-year warranty. Within that time, it broke, so I put in for a warranty claim. They said sure, here’s your shipping label, we’ll send you a refund or replacement. Time goes by, no refund or replacement, no reply to further messages. I contact ebay support and they tell me to do a chargeback. So I do. Bank wants some documentation, I provide everything, they put it through, I get the refund, and no account closure from ebay.
Ebay telling you to do it is different. Try a chargeback on steam or origin and you’ll potentially lose your entire game library.